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Protected status no longer justified for Central Americans and Haitians in US, State Dept. says

November 4, 2017 by  
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More than 300,000 Central Americans and Haitians living in the United States under a form of temporary permission no longer need to be shielded from deportation, the State Department told Homeland Security officials this week, a few days ahead of a highly anticipated DHS announcement about whether to renew that protection.

On Tuesday, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson sent a letter to acting DHS secretary Elaine Duke to inform her that conditions in Central America and Haiti that had been used to justify the protection no longer necessitate a reprieve for the migrants, some of whom have been allowed to live and work in the United States for 20 years under a program known as Temporary Protected Status (TPS).

Tillerson’s assessment, required by law, has not been made public, but its recommendations were confirmed by several administration officials familiar with its contents. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.

DHS has until Monday to announce its plans for roughly 57,000 Hondurans and 2,500 Nicaraguans whose TPS protections will expire in early January. Although most arrived here illegally, they were exempted from deportation after Hurricane Mitch devastated Central America in 1998. Their TPS protections have been renewed routinely since then, in some cases following additional natural disasters and resulting insecurity.

Congress established TPS in 1990 to protect foreign nationals from being returned to their countries amid instability and precarious conditions caused by natural disasters or armed conflict.

Trump administration officials have repeatedly noted that the program was meant to be temporary — not a way for people to become long-term residents of the United States. Officials said that long-ago disasters should not be used to extend provisional immigration status when the initial justification for it no longer exists.

Tillerson’s assessment is consistent with broader administration efforts to reduce immigration to the United States and comply with legal restrictions that it maintains have been loosely enforced in the past.

“It is fair to say that this administration is interpreting the law, exactly as it is, which the previous one did not,” an administration official said.

The official acknowledged that the countries in question continue to suffer from problems of poverty, corruption and violence that, in many cases, have spurred illegal migration. But, the official said, those conditions should be addressed in other ways.

“The solution is going to require working with Congress and these countries,” the official said. “We are equally committed to finding that. There is no lack of empathy here.”

But “with this particular law,” the official said, “it is very clear to this administration what needs to be done.”

Administration officials have also said that the return of tens of thousands of migrants could benefit the Central American nations and Haiti, because their citizens will return with job skills, democratic values and personal savings acquired from living long term in the United States.

Many of the immigrants have homes, businesses and U.S.-born children, but if the protections expire, they could be subject to arrest and deportation. “We understand this is a very difficult decision,” the administration official said.

DHS officials declined to say Friday what the agency planned to do, or when an announcement would be made.

“The acting secretary has made no decision on TPS,” said Tyler Houlton, a spokesman for the agency.

Tillerson’s letter does not amount to a recommendation. But DHS is required to seek the agency’s input, and officials said the State Department’s position carries significant weight.

The largest group of TPS recipients — about 200,000 — are from El Salvador, and DHS has until early January to announce its plans for them. At least 30,000 of them live in the Washington area, according to immigrant advocacy groups.

When the Obama administration last extended TPS for the Salvadorans, in July 2016, it said that they were eligible because conditions justifying it continued to be met.

“There continues to be a substantial, but temporary, disruption of living conditions in El Salvador resulting from a series of earthquakes in 2001,” Homeland Security officials said at the time, “and El Salvador remains unable, temporarily, to handle adequately the return of its nationals.”

DHS must also decide what to do with about 50,000 Haitian TPS recipients by Thanksgiving Day. The Haitians, who are concentrated in South Florida, received TPS after a 2010 earthquake that killed 200,000.

Advocates say removing TPS would be a cruel blow to long-standing, law-abiding immigrants, forcing them to decide between remaining in the country illegally or leaving their homes and families. According to a recent study by the left-leaning Center for American Progress, TPS recipients have nearly 275,000 U.S.-born children.

If recipients lose their protections but defy orders to leave, it would not be difficult for immigration enforcement agents to find them. The provisional nature of their status requires them to maintain current records with DHS; the agency has their addresses, phone numbers and other personal information.

“Terminating TPS at this time would be inhumane and untenable,” a group of Catholic charity leaders wrote to Duke in a recent letter, arguing that it would “needlessly add large numbers of Hondurans and Salvadorans to the undocumented population in the U.S., lead to family separation, and unnecessarily cause the Department of Homeland Security to expend resources on individuals who are already registered with our government and whose safe return is forestalled by dire humanitarian circumstances.”

If DHS ends the TPS protections, it is expected to grant recipients a grace period of at least six months or more to give them time to prepare for departure.

In May, then-DHS Secretary John F. Kelly extended TPS for Haitians for six months, far less than the 18-month waivers granted by the Obama administration.

Kelly, in a statement at the time, called the six-month window a “limited” extension whose purpose was to “allow Haitian TPS recipients living in the United States time to attain travel documents and make other necessary arrangements for their ultimate departure from the United States.”

Haiti is the Western Hemisphere’s poorest country and remains in the grips of a cholera epidemic triggered by U.N. troops who were sent after the earthquake.

Advocates of reduced immigration say the Haiti decision will be a key test of the administration’s willingness to follow through on its by-the-books rhetoric.

Immigration experts believe many of the Haitians could attempt to seek refuge in Canada, particularly French-speaking Quebec, to avoid arrest and deportation.

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FBI Interviews Acquaintance of Man Charged in Manhattan Attack

November 4, 2017 by  
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The F.B.I. declined to comment on the interview with Mr. Kadirov.

Some details about the pair’s friendship and Mr. Kadirov’s account to the F.B.I. emerged on Friday. (He spells his first name Mokhammadzokir, and not Mukhammadzoir, as the authorities initially rendered it.)

The pair met in Florida, where Mr. Kadirov moved after arriving in the United States in 2014. The person with knowledge of the interview said they did not know each other well at the time. Neighbors in the apartment complex where Mr. Kadirov lived with his family in Tampa said they often saw Mr. Kadirov and Mr. Saipov together there and at a nearby mosque.

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Mokhammadzokir Kadirov

Credit
Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

They became closer after both moved to New Jersey, the person said. They drove for Uber, though Mr. Kadirov also worked odd jobs: as a sales manager at a flooring company and for a car company.

Mr. Kadirov noticed Mr. Saipov growing more and more short-tempered and agitated, the person said, even fighting with customers and people on the road.

Mr. Kadirov gave his friend books on Islam and urged him to listen to the teachings of Uzbek religious leaders. But Mr. Saipov “didn’t seem interested,” the person said, and asked questions that Mr. Kadirov felt showed an ignorance of Islam.

Rather, Mr. Saipov seemed more committed to the most conservative outward observances of the religion. He wore his beard long and wild, in a style rare among Uzbeks. And neighbors and friends said Mr. Saipov’s wife wore a niqab as part of a full-body covering that left only her eyes exposed. In Uzbekistan, such conservative clothing is nearly unheard-of.

In recent months, Mr. Saipov began talking about the possibility of moving back to Uzbekistan, the person said. Money was tight, Mr. Saipov told people, and the long-haul trucking business that had supported him since he arrived in the United States in 2010 was no longer as lucrative. He sold his truck and began taking odd jobs, as well as driving for Uber.

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Mr. Saipov’s plan, the person said, was to wait until his wife obtained American citizenship and then move back to Uzbekistan, where they are both from.

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Why he veered so violently from that plan is still unclear.

Like Mr. Saipov, Mr. Kadirov received a green card through the diversity visa program. Mr. Kadirov, who speaks Uzbek, Arabic, Russian and English, took classes in Islamic studies and the Quran at Al-Azhar University in Cairo from 2005 to 2012, the person said. His father is a diplomat and his mother is a doctor.

More recently, he had been taking continuing education classes in New Jersey.

In a separate development on Friday, John J. Miller, the New York Police Department’s deputy commissioner for intelligence and counterterrorism, said at a news conference that investigators were combing Mr. Saipov’s phone records and internet contacts. He said investigators had interviewed witnesses who said they had seen Mr. Saipov in the weeks before the attack with a rental truck like the one used in the attack. Mr. Miller said investigators had also canvassed for video to try to corroborate those accounts.

Photo

Law enforcement officers leaving the Masjid Omar Mosque, which is next to the apartment where Mr. Saipov lived in Paterson.

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Bryan Anselm for The New York Times

As people gathered on Friday for prayers at a mosque near where Mr. Saipov lived in Paterson, N.J., some in the Muslim community there were preparing for a steep escalation in threats since the attack.

The Islamic Center of Passaic County said it had received eight threatening phone calls on Wednesday and Thursday. Officials there notified the Paterson Police Department, which told the center it was investigating the threats.

“We haven’t seen anything of this magnitude,” said a woman who worked for several years at the center and declined to give her name out of fear for her safety.

Hasan Husein, an interpreter for the imam at the Masjid Omar Mosque in Paterson, which is next to the apartment where Mr. Saipov lived, said threatening callers contacted them this week, too. The mosque reported them to the police.

“Quite a few calls,” Mr. Husein said after Friday’s afternoon prayer. “Bad words and, ‘Go back to your country.’”

At the mosque, where attendance for afternoon prayers spilled into an outdoor plaza, Manny Simreen said several people had driven by this week and shouted insults, like “Get out of the country!”

Michael J. Whitaker, a spokesman for the F.B.I.’s regional office in Newark, said that the bureau was investigating multiple threats against mosques.

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”We are aware of several threats against the Muslim community in New Jersey and take every threat seriously,” he said. “We continue to urge the public to please remain vigilant and report any and all suspicious activity to law enforcement immediately.”

Adam Goldman, Sean Piccoli and Nate Schweber contributed reporting.


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